Die Einsamen

audiobook

Die Einsamen

by Paul Heyse

DE·~1 hours

Chapters

Description

A German poet finds himself stranded on the sun‑kissed cliffs of Sorrento after weeks of violent southern storms have finally given way to calm. From his window he watches the sea glitter, the fig trees burst with fruit, and the hills fill with bustling villagers heading to a mountain festival. The sudden warmth awakens a restless longing for inspiration that has been smothered by cold rooms and quiet days.

As he wanders the fragrant orange groves, the chorus of church bells, laughing boys, and fluttering butterflies overwhelms his senses. Yet the poet feels a hollow frustration, questioning whether poetry can ever capture the sheer magnitude of the landscape before him. He longs to let his voice rise with the spring air, even as doubt and envy toward more confident singers keep him silent, hovering between awe and the fear of an inadequate expression.

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Details

Language

de

Duration

~1 hours (60K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2005-10-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Paul Heyse

Paul Heyse

1830–1914

A Nobel Prize-winning German writer, he became famous for elegant novellas, poems, and plays that helped shape literary life in 19th-century Munich. His work is often remembered for its polished style, psychological insight, and strong storytelling.

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